Building With Art Gallery, Indoor Farming Terraces Envisioned for Chelsea

Building With Art Gallery, Indoor Farming Terraces Envisioned for ChelseaView Full Caption

CHELSEA — A revolving glass building with indoor farming terraces, apartments and an art gallery could rise next to the High Line — if a design firm’s plans materialize.

Architectural firm Weston Baker Creative designed the 12-story conceptual project “for an architecture competition that called for a farm and apartment building” for a site near West 18th Street and 10th Avenue along the High Line, the firm wrote in an email.

Pedestrians could access the second-floor art gallery, as well as an observation garden on the building’s top floor, from the High Line, the firm’s website says.

The building would be able to twist “to evenly distribute daylight throughout the day,” the firm’s site says.

All of this would be propped up on a concrete base, CityRealty reported.

“Judging by the fantastical form of the building within West Chelsea's strict zoning guidelines, the amount of space devoted to public use (usually a no-no for New York residential developers), and that the High Line prohibits direct access to private properties alongside it, it's safe to say this scheme is conceptual,” the outlet wrote.

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